Tag Archives: politics

Is Congress about to put you out of work?


 

 

 

Click here to watch the video

Watch the Video | Send Our Video to Your Elected Officials

Now that the deficit committee failed, war profiteers are scrambling to undo automatic cuts to their profit margins. They’ve re-launched their propaganda campaign focusing on jobs, but our new video exposes the truth: military spending is a job killer. If Washington, D.C. stops automatic cuts to the military budget at the expense of other programs, it will be a disaster for the economy.Send our video to your elected officials and make sure they understand the consequences of failing to make real cuts to the military budget.Super-wealthy war profiteer CEOs rely on massive Pentagon budgets for their wealthy lifestyles. They and their allies in the Pentagon are using huge lobbying budgets in an unprecedented economic fear campaign to convince Congress that war spending is some kind of grotesque jobs program. Nothing could be further from the truth.As our video shows, military spending costs jobs compared to other ways of spending the money. Protecting war budgets at the expense of other job-creating programs will mean more jobless people than virtually any other possible budget plan.Help us put the truth in your elected officials’ hands. Our toolwill let you push your senators and congressmen to do the right thing, despite the war industry’s propaganda push.This is an uphill battle, and we need your help. Please send our latest video to your elected officials now so they understand that military spending costs jobs.

Sincerely,

Derrick Crowe, Robert Greenwald
and the Brave New Foundation team

P.S. We continue to fight the war profiteers’ propaganda, but doing so with hard-hitting videos like this is expensive. After you send the video to Congress, please consider making a donation to support War Costs.

Monday mashup … &some News


just another rant …

Fall back y’all and we did.

The President and Mrs. Obama are at the APEC summit in Hawaii. The rest of us have to hear the continuous drone from Teapublicans who still think Americans want repeal HCR, Wall Street reform, cut Education by 20%, replace and eliminate social service programs that women, vets, older folks and the new poor use. I have to say Teapublicans in Congress must have taken a Pledge to wear earplugs in order to get through all their just say not campaign. Suffice it to say if these Teapublicans continue to go after the Middle Class Social Security Medicare/caid instead of JOBS it would definitely seem to be a recipe for trouble and likely force the USA into a double dip or deeper recession and will be the reason they will become unemployed; hopefully. I happen to think we went right into a depression what with losing 750 thousand jobs a month even before President Obama took office. The current rhetoric has absolutely nothing to do with JOBS or the Economy …If people are listening they have no intention of helping Americans unless it is on the backs of the Middle and Lower classes people …get that in your head!!! The Party of NO will be in control for about a minute and what we as Democrats need to remember is that we have to call Teapublicans out on every move they make to ruin the current President instead of focusing on and or creating Jobs. I have to say anyone with any common sense knows that the top 2% will not spend their tax cuts to create an environment so that people will be hired or create jobs and if they do it will be to outsource them for lower wages in China, Mexico etc. If you do not believe it, just tune into CNBC occasionally, and hear the words coming from various Teapublicans Ludlow and associates trot out on any given day.

I hope everyone is asking their Teapublican member of Congress what exactly the top 2% did with the Bush giveaways because it could not have been on hiring and creating jobs or we would not be in worse shape since the 2010 Midterm elections or see the mess all around us. I feel that after three years of gridlock from the Teapublican Party of No things are about to get heated within their own Family Values Platform party. Reports are and maybe Teapublicans need reminding that over 70% of Americans want to tax millionaires and billionaires, most do not want cuts to Soc.Security or Medicare, over half  of us want the new Affordable Health Care Act to be law. Yet, conservative members of Congress have given themselves over to Mr. Norquist as well as the big money brothers Koch and if you start to think about it that ditch President Obama pulled us from is a whole lot closer now that we have an extreme part of Congress controlling the House of Representatives … The question is do Teapublicans care what happens to their own family friends and co-workers jobs  and status in life if they continue this lemming march toward disaster?

 Anyway –

“Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.” –George Orwell

I personally do not want to go back to colonial days we must move forward stay in the present so discrimination fails …the past fails and equal rights for all prevails.

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the World. Indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.” –Margaret Mead

Jus sayin

Other News …

Congress Returns to Negotiate Another Short-term Funding Bill

House Considers Expanding Gun-Carry Laws

Blue Cross CEO Discusses Health Care Business

House Democrats Examine Voting Law Changes

President Obama Opens APEC Summit

Grover Norquist Discusses Taxes and the “Super Committee”

News and Documentary Emmys Awarded

10Cost Estimate for S. 27, Preserve Access to Affordable Generics Act


S. 27, Preserve Access to Affordable Generics Act

Cost estimate
for the bill as reported by the Senate Committee on the Judiciary on July 22,
2011

The document above is in pdf form so if clicking on it fails Please click and open in new window… Thank you

Confession​s of an ex-politic​al candidate …for a seat on the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Council


Confessions of an ex-political candidate

by Lori Ann Potter

In 2003 I ran for political office.  I was a candidate vying for a seat on the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Council, and  I learned s ome stuff about tribal politics that I’d like to share.  So without further adieu, I hereby dedicate this week’s post to tribal communities everywhere and their political candidate hopefuls.  Here is my top ten lessons-learned during the 2003 campaign season:

  1. “Big families” mean “more votes”.  The largest families typically hold the lion’s-share of strategic political power on our reservation.   This being the case, it didn’t take “rocket science” for me to realize the odds were considerably stacked against me.  With only seven direct relatives at proper voting age (at least 18 years old), I hail from the second smallest family line at Mashantucket. You can easily fit all of us into one mini-van.
  2. I did alright.  When everything was tallied I received 45 votes, landing somewhere in the middle of all the candidate vote totals.  It was not enough to win, but with approximately 20% of the overall vote, I have to admit it wasn’t bad for a first-time campaign.  And I can now cross “run for office” off my bucket list.
  3. 45 Votes may as well be 4 votes because they still won’t win an election.  From what I’ve observed, it takes between 80-120 votes to win a tribal council seat – depending on how many candidates are running, how many seats are vacant, and how many voters show up that first Sunday in November before polls close at noon.
  4. Every year, there are “secret deals”.  Alliances are commonly forged privately between one or more mid-sized family candidates and larger-family representatives.  Basically what happens is this: candidate “A” seeks support from council members representing the largest family line, offering his or her unequivocal political allegiance in exchange for whatever number of votes is needed to win.
  5. Secret deals” aggravate me.  I just can’t bring myself to align politically with people in “power”.   A former chairman once confronted me about it privately when he was still in office. “We don’t support placing you in a leadership position because we don’t know where you stand politically,” he declared, matter-of-factly.  I quipped right back: “If you or anyone else wants to know ‘where I stand’ on any political matter, all you need to do is ask me and I will tell you.”  He wasn’t fond of my abrupt honesty.  I simply doubt that it’s in my tribe’s best interest for any candidate to promise their unwavering support to a dictatorship without regard to the potential outcome such support may b ring.  I believe doing so lowers one’s standard of ethics considerably, focusing instead on power brokering, scoring titles or raking in a much higher paycheck.  When such “deals” are done, their outcome always points to a manipulative, fear-based style of leadership. Frankly, I’d rather sleep at night.
  6. People who feel threatened by you will do really stupid things.  I paid way too much for ten double-sided campaign signs, only to discover that all but one were completely destroyed by the vandalism of strategic knife-slashes, burn marks, tire treads, and the sharpie-inflicted “enhancements” of mustaches, F-bombs and smatterings of other colorful expletives.  Mind you, that’s in addition to all the wildly half-baked gossip that kept bumbling its way back to me.  It’s amazing how inventive lies can become.
  7. Campaigning can be hazardous to your health.  Yes, the rumors are true.  Some candidates have indeed received “threats”.  A few have even dodged potentially harmful or even fatal “accidents”.  For instance, in 2003 one candidate shared with me a threatening hand-written note she received.  It was tied to a rock that shattered her living room window, warning her to drop out of the race …or else.  Another candidate walked out to his vehicle one night after a long meeting and discovered his severed brake-line with the fluid trickling down to the moonlit pavement below.  I know because I was there.
  8. Half of the people who promise to vote for you actually will.  If you are a hopeful candidate this season, please heed these words of advice.   When people shower you with smiles, compliments, shoulder-pats and hugs, promises to “have your back” in the voting booth and other random “feel-good” fluffy stuff… For the love of all common-sense and decency don’t fall for that crap!   And to all of the folks out there who get their kicks from pumping candidates’ heads full of sanctimonious euphoric nonsense – stop it!  Have enough courage to represent the real you.  If you cannot commit, then do not promise that you will.
  9. Losing an election can be the best thing that ever happened to you.   In my situation, I went right back to school and finished two degrees that I might never have achieved had I won that election.  And with the added perspective gained from several years working with my tribe’s constitution review team, I can see that the root of our political problems is directly linked to the governing foundation spelled out in my tribe’s constitution.  At Mashantucket, all powers of government are centralized into one branch – a tribal council of seven people.  Because they hold this magnitude of power, the tribal council can do whatever they want with whatever funds or resources they choose whenever they feel like it.   So just imagine for a moment what would happen if a tribe had no checks and balances on its government power, while hundreds of millions of dollars filter down from their casino through one group of seven leaders every year for 20 straight years.  Would those seven leaders have the strength to uphold integrity rather than yield to fear and temptation?
  10. You don’t need a leadership position in order to make a difference.  Some of the most powerful leaders in world history have been those who were not holding leadership positions when they wielded the most influence, overcame unbelievable odds, and radically disrupted the status quo of dictatorships.  Moses contended with Pharaoh and won freedom for Israel.  Martin Luther challenged Catholicism and the Protestant church was born.  Rosa Parks rebelled against racist laws by not moving to the back of a bus. Helen Keller was so influential with advocating women’s rights that she was placed on the FBI’s “watch list” despite being blind, deaf and mute.  And a boy named David once hurled a small stone at a giant warrior, killing him instantly in front of  his own army cowering in fear, decades before he was crowned King.   All of them “underdogs”.  All of them championed their values no matter what the cost.  And all of them were history makers.